How Can We Help?
The Socio-Relational and the Individual World
The socio-relational world of that individual person must mirror the internal neural structure of that individual nervous system. The socio-relational world is interactional. Interaction mirrors the neural structure. Interaction is neural. Each is analogic and literal, recursive in the one moment and movement, informing and inventing the other. Human symptoms and problems appear as that symmetry fails – when the socio-relational world of the individual does not match the individuals nervous system and the individual cognition that arises from this.
Sometimes the socio-relational world of the individual person and their nervous system is more complicated and carries more complexity than that nervous system can cognitively handle. The individual becomes symptomatic, develops problems, somatically, behaviorally, emotionally, and relationally.
Sometimes the socio-relational world of the individual person and their nervous system is too small, and it is as if that person is cognitively starving to death. Symptoms of isolation and aloneness are addictions that mirror self-referential preoccupation. In each of these cases, individuals have been isolated by their own self-reference, and the collusion of the world around them, that has privileged such privilege.